Uwe Bohnhardt

Uwe Bohnhardt (1 October 1977-4 November 2011) was a German far-right extremist who was a leader of National Socialist Underground alongside Uwe Mundlos and Beate Zschape. Bohnhardt and Mundlos both committed suicide while fleeing from German police after a bank robbery in Eisenach on 4 November 2011.

Biography
Uwe Bohnhardt was born on 1 October 1977 in Jena, East Germany, the son of a teacher and an engineer. His family grew up in a housing estate, and the death of his older brother in 1988 left Uwe traumatized. After German Reunification, Bohnhardt became a far-right activist, and he joined the National Socialist Underground on the invitation of the cousin of Beate Zschape. Bohnhardt proved his loyalty by taking a knife and tearing down socialist banners in post-reunification Germany in the fall of 1992, and Bohnhardt, Zschape, and Uwe Mundlos would become the leaders of a neo-Nazi group that worshipped Rudolf Hess and hated immigrants (especially Muslims), Jews, the government, socialists, and communists. During the late 1990s and the early 2000s, the group engaged in a series of murders against immigrants, and the group formed a right-wing cell to ignite a race war in Germany. On 4 November 2011, Bohnhardt and Mundlos both decided to embark on their fourteenth bank robbery, now in the city of Eisenach. The two of them committed suicide with shotguns while fleeing from police, ending their spate of terrorist attacks.